In the presentation they say they use agents as well:
"We use several layers of "agents", coated around a Si-Al ceramic surface surrounding the nickel foam, to help RSH atoms to survive this journey. Some of these agents are ZnO, MgO and ZrO2."

Do I undertand correctly that the Celani treatment mainly consists of stripping off the plastic insulation off ISOTAN44 and then running a 2A to 3A current for about 5 minutes? And that this grows nanostructures on the wire surface? That sounds pretty simple to try.

On 08/13/2012 11:31 AM, Alain Sepeda wrote:
Quite logical they think about using off the shelves products, and especially well known techniques used for catalyst that increase active surface...
Good engineer practice.
maybe mixing that material with other treatment (like the one Celani do on his wires, but adapted to foam), could even make it better... maybe is it what they do...

did anybody else thought about using that kind of foam in LENR research ?


2012/8/13 Andre Blum <andre_vor...@blums.nl <mailto:andre_vor...@blums.nl>>

    The nickel foam that defkalion describes in their NI-week
    slideshow seems to be an off-the-shelve product.

Funny enough, it is available from a company called ecocatalysis, ecat in short.
    The stuff is shown here:
    
http://ecocatalysis.com/en/products/foam-materials-foam-metals/nickel-foam-en.html

    Nice ecat logo!
    The photo of the foam is the exactly the same as the one used in
    the defkalion slide deck.

    Andre



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